PIM Designated Router Load BalancingAlibaba Group520 Almanor AvenueSunnyvaleCA94085United States of Americayiqun.cai@alibaba-inc.comAlibaba Group520 Almanor AvenueSunnyvaleCA94085United States of Americaheidi.ou@alibaba-inc.comvallepal@yahoo.comCisco Systems, Inc.821 Alder Drive,MilpitasCA95035United States of Americamankamis@cisco.comCisco Systems, Inc.Tasman DriveSan JoseCA95134United States of Americastig@cisco.comBritish TelecomAdastral ParkIpswichIP5 2REUnited Kingdomandy.da.green@bt.com
Routing
MulticastOn a multi-access network, one of the PIM-SM (PIM Sparse Mode)
routers is elected as a
Designated Router. One of the responsibilities of the Designated Router
is to track local multicast listeners and forward data to these
listeners if the group is operating in PIM-SM. This
document specifies a modification to the PIM-SM protocol that
allows more than one of the PIM-SM routers to take on this responsibility
so that the forwarding load can be distributed among multiple routers.
Status of This Memo
This is an Internet Standards Track document.
This document is a product of the Internet Engineering Task Force
(IETF). It represents the consensus of the IETF community. It has
received public review and has been approved for publication by
the Internet Engineering Steering Group (IESG). Further
information on Internet Standards is available in Section 2 of
RFC 7841.
Information about the current status of this document, any
errata, and how to provide feedback on it may be obtained at
.
Copyright Notice
Copyright (c) 2020 IETF Trust and the persons identified as the
document authors. All rights reserved.
This document is subject to BCP 78 and the IETF Trust's Legal
Provisions Relating to IETF Documents
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Table of Contents
. Introduction
. Terminology
. Applicability
. Functional Overview
. GDR Candidates
. Protocol Specification
. Hash Mask and Hash Algorithm
. Modulo Hash Algorithm
. Modulo Hash Algorithm Examples
. Limitations
. PIM Hello Options
. PIM DR Load-Balancing Capability (DRLB-Cap) Hello Option
. PIM DR Load-Balancing List (DRLB-List) Hello Option
. PIM DR Operation
. PIM GDR Candidate Operation
. DRLB-List Hello Option Processing
. PIM Assert Modification
. Backward Compatibility
. Operational Considerations
. IANA Considerations
. Initial Registry
. Assignment of New Hash Algorithms
. Security Considerations
. References
. Normative References
. Informative References
Acknowledgements
Authors' Addresses
IntroductionOn a multi-access LAN (such as an Ethernet) with one or more PIM-SM
(PIM Sparse Mode) routers, one
of the PIM-SM
routers is elected as a Designated Router (DR). The PIM DR has two
responsibilities in the PIM-SM protocol. For any active sources on a LAN,
the PIM DR is responsible for registering with the Rendezvous Point (RP)
if the group is operating in PIM-SM. Also, the PIM DR is responsible for
tracking local multicast listeners and forwarding data to these
listeners if the group is operating in PIM-SM.
Consider the following LAN in :Assume R1 is elected as the DR. According to the
PIM-SM protocol, R1 will be responsible for forwarding traffic
to that LAN on behalf of all local members. In addition to keeping
track of membership reports, R1 is also responsible for
initiating the creation of source and/or shared trees towards the
senders or the RPs. The membership reports would be IGMP or Multicast
Listener Discovery (MLD)
messages. This applies to any versions of the IGMP and MLD protocols.
The most recent versions are IGMPv3 and
MLDv2 .
Having a single router acting as DR and being responsible for
data-plane forwarding leads to several issues. One of the issues is
that the
aggregated bandwidth will be limited to what R1 can handle with
regards to capacity of incoming links, the interface on the LAN,
and total forwarding capacity. It is very common that a LAN consists of
switches that run IGMP/MLD or PIM snooping .
This allows the forwarding of multicast packets to be
restricted only to segments leading to receivers that have indicated
their interest in multicast groups using either IGMP or MLD. The
emergence of the switched Ethernet allows the aggregated bandwidth to
exceed, sometimes by a large number, that of a single link. For
example, let us modify and
introduce an Ethernet switch in .
Let us assume that each individual link is a Gigabit Ethernet. Each
router (R1, R2, and R3) and the switch have enough forwarding capacity
to handle hundreds of gigabits of data.
Let us further assume that each of the hosts requests 500 Mbps of
unique multicast data. This totals to 1.5 Gbps of data, which is less
than what each switch or the combined uplink bandwidth across the
routers can handle, even under failure of a single router.
On the other hand, the link between R1 and switch, via port gi1, can
only handle a throughput of 1 Gbps. And if R1 is the only DR (the
PIM DR elected using the procedure defined by ),
at least 500 Mbps worth of data will be lost because the only link that
can be used to draw the traffic from the routers to the switch is via
gi1. In other words, the entire network's throughput is limited by the
single connection between the PIM DR and the switch (or LAN, as in
).
Another important issue is related to failover. If R1 is the only
forwarder on a shared LAN, when R1
goes out of service, multicast forwarding for the entire LAN has
to be rebuilt by the newly elected PIM DR. However, if there were a
way that allowed multiple routers to forward to the LAN for
different groups, failure of one of the routers would only lead to
disruption to a subset of the flows, therefore improving the overall
resilience of the network.
This document specifies a modification to the PIM-SM protocol
that allows more than one of these routers, called Group Designated
Routers (GDRs), to be selected so that the forwarding load can be
distributed among a number of routers.
Terminology
The key words "MUST", "MUST NOT",
"REQUIRED", "SHALL", "SHALL NOT", "SHOULD", "SHOULD NOT",
"RECOMMENDED", "NOT RECOMMENDED",
"MAY", and "OPTIONAL" in this document are
to be interpreted as
described in BCP 14
when, and only when, they appear in all capitals, as shown here.
With respect to PIM-SM, this document follows the terminology that
has been defined in .
This document also introduces the following new acronyms:
GDR: Group Designated Router.
For each multicast
flow, either a (*,G) for Any-Source Multicast (ASM) or an (S,G)
for Source-Specific Multicast (SSM) ,
a hash algorithm (described below) is used to select one of the
routers as a GDR. The GDR is responsible for initiating the
forwarding tree building process for the corresponding multicast
flow.
GDR Candidate:
a router that has the potential to
become a GDR. There might be multiple GDR Candidates on a LAN,
but only one can become the GDR for a specific multicast flow.
ApplicabilityThe extension specified in this document applies to
PIM-SM routers acting as last-hop routers (there are directly connected
receivers). It does not alter the behavior of a PIM DR or any other
routers on the first-hop network (directly connected sources).
This is because the source tree is built using the IP address of the
sender, not the IP address of the PIM DR that sends PIM registers
towards the RP. The load balancing between first-hop routers can be
achieved naturally if an IGP provides equal cost multiple paths
(which it usually does in practice). Also, distributing the load to do
source registration does not justify the additional complexity required
to support it.
Functional OverviewIn the PIM DR election as defined in , when
multiple routers are connected to a multi-access LAN (for
example, an Ethernet), one of them is elected to act as PIM DR. The
PIM DR is responsible for sending local Join/Prune messages towards the
RP or source. In order to elect the PIM DR, each PIM router on the LAN
examines the received PIM Hello messages and compares its own DR
priority and IP address with those of its neighbors. The router with
the highest DR priority is the PIM DR. If there are multiple such
routers, their IP addresses are used as the tiebreaker, as described
in .
In order to share forwarding load among last-hop routers, besides the
normal PIM DR election, one or more GDRs are elected on the
multi-access LAN. There is only one PIM DR on the multi-access
LAN, but there might be multiple GDR Candidates.
For each multicast flow, that is, (*,G) for ASM and (S,G) for SSM,
a hash algorithm () is used to
select one of the routers to be the GDR.
The new DR Load-Balancing Capability (DRLB-Cap) PIM Hello Option is
used to announce the Capability, as well as the hash algorithm type.
Routers with the new DRLB-Cap Option advertised in their PIM Hello,
using the same GDR election hash algorithm and the same DR priority as
the PIM DR, are considered as GDR Candidates.
Hash masks are defined for Source, Group, and RP, separately, in
order to handle PIM ASM/SSM. The masks, as well as a sorted list of GDR
Candidate addresses, are announced by the DR in a new DR Load-Balancing
List (DRLB-List) PIM Hello Option.
A hash algorithm based on the announced Source, Group, or RP masks
allows one GDR to be assigned to a corresponding multicast state.
That GDR is responsible for initiating the creation of the
multicast forwarding tree for multicast traffic.
GDR CandidatesGDR is the new concept introduced by this specification. GDR
Candidates are routers eligible for GDR election on the LAN. To
become a GDR Candidate, a router must have the same DR priority and
run the same GDR election hash algorithm as the DR on the LAN.
For example, assume there are 4 routers on the LAN: R1, R2, R3, and
R4, each announcing a DRLB-Cap Option. R1, R2, and R3 have the same
DR priority, while R4's DR priority is less preferred.
In this example, R4 will not be eligible for GDR election, because R4
will not become a PIM DR unless all of R1, R2, and R3 go out of
service.
Furthermore, assume router R1 wins the PIM DR election, R1 and R2
advertise the same hash algorithm for GDR election, while R3 advertises
a different one. In this case, only R1 and R2 will be eligible for GDR
election, while R3 will not.
As a DR, R1 will include its own Load-Balancing Hash Masks and
the identity of R1 and R2 (the GDR Candidates) in its DRLB-List Hello
Option.
Protocol SpecificationHash Mask and Hash AlgorithmA hash mask is used to extract a number of bits from the
corresponding IP address field (32 for IPv4, 128 for IPv6) and
calculate a hash value. A hash value is used to select a GDR from GDR
Candidates advertised by the PIM DR. Hash masks allow for certain flows
to always be forwarded by the same GDR, by ignoring certain bits in the
hash value calculation, so that the hash values are the same. For
example, 0.0.255.0 defines a
hash mask for an IPv4 address that masks the first, second, and
fourth octets, which means that only the third octet will
influence the hash value computed. Note that the masks need not
be a contiguous set of bits. For example, for IPv4, 15.15.15.15 would be a
valid mask.
In the text below, a hash mask is, in some places, said to be zero.
A hash mask is zero if no bits are set, that is,
0.0.0.0 for IPv4 and :: for IPv6. Also, a hash mask is said to be
an all-bits-set mask if it is 255.255.255.255 for IPv4 or
ffff:ffff:ffff:ffff:ffff:ffff:ffff:ffff for IPv6.
There are three hash masks defined:
RP Hash Mask
Source Hash Mask
Group Hash Mask
The hash masks need to be configured on the PIM routers that can
potentially become a PIM DR, unless the implementation provides
default hash mask values.
An implementation SHOULD have default hash mask values as follows.
The default RP Hash Mask SHOULD be zero (no bits set). The default
Source and Group Hash Masks SHOULD both be all-bits-set masks.
These default values are likely acceptable for most deployments and
simplify configuration. There is only a need to use other masks if
one needs to ensure that certain flows are forwarded by the same GDR.
The DRLB-List Hello Option contains a list of GDR Candidates.
The first one listed has ordinal number 0, the second listed
ordinal number 1, and the last one has ordinal number N - 1 if
there are N candidates listed. The hash value computed will be
the ordinal number of the GDR Candidate that is acting as GDR for
the flow in question.
The input to be hashed is determined as follows:
If the group is in ASM mode and the RP Hash Mask announced by
the PIM DR is not zero (at least one bit is set), calculate the
value of hashvalue_RP () to determine
the GDR.
If the group is in ASM mode and the RP Hash Mask announced by
the PIM DR is zero (no bits are set), obtain the value of
hashvalue_Group () to determine the
GDR.
If the group is in SSM mode, use
hashvalue_SG () to determine the GDR.
A simple modulo hash algorithm is defined in this document.
However, to allow another hash algorithm to be used, a 1-octet
"Hash Algorithm" field is included in the DRLB-Cap Hello Option to
specify the hash algorithm used by the router.
If different hash algorithms are advertised among the routers
on a LAN, only the routers advertising the same hash algorithm
as the DR (as well as having the same DR priority as the DR) are
eligible for GDR election.
Modulo Hash Algorithm
As part of computing the hash, the notation LSZC(hash_mask) is used
to denote the number of zeroes
counted from the least significant bit of a hash mask
hash_mask. As an example, LSZC(255.255.128) is 7 and
LSZC(ffff:8000::) is 111. If all bits are set, LSZC will
be 0. If the mask is zero, then
LSZC will be 32 for IPv4 and 128 for IPv6.
The number of GDR Candidates is denoted as GDRC.
The idea behind the modulo hash algorithm is, in simple terms,
that the corresponding mask is applied to a value, then the result
is shifted right LSZC(mask) bits so that the least significant bits
that were masked out are not considered. Then, this result is masked
by 0xffffffff, keeping only the last 32 bits of the result
(this only makes a difference for IPv6). Finally, the hash value is
this result modulo the number of GDR Candidates (GDRC).
The modulo hash algorithm, for computing the values hashvalue_RP,
hashvalue_Group, and hashvalue_SG, is defined as follows.
hashvalue_RP is calculated as:
(((RP_address & RP_mask) >> LSZC(RP_mask)) & 0xffffffff) % GDRC
RP_address is the address of the RP defined for the group,
and RP_mask is the RP Hash Mask.
Group_address is the group address, and Group_mask is the
Group Hash Mask.
Modulo Hash Algorithm ExamplesTo help illustrate the algorithm, consider this example.
Router X with IPv4 address 203.0.113.1 receives a DRLB-List
Hello Option from the DR that announces RP Hash
Mask 0.0.255.0 and a list of GDR Candidates, sorted by IP
addresses from high to low: 203.0.113.3, 203.0.113.2, and
203.0.113.1. The ordinal number assigned to those addresses
would be:
0 for 203.0.113.3; 1 for 203.0.113.2; 2 for 203.0.113.1
(Router X).Assume there are 2 RPs: RP1 192.0.2.1 for Group1 and RP2
198.51.100.2 for Group2. Following the modulo hash algorithm:
LSZC(0.0.255.0) is 8, and GDRC is 3.
The hashvalue_RP for Group1 with RP RP1 is:
This is different from the ordinal number of Router X (2).
Hence, Router X will not be GDR for Group2.
For IPv6, consider this example, similar to the above.
Router X with IPv6 address fe80::1 receives a DRLB-List
Hello Option from the DR that announces RP Hash
Mask ::ffff:ffff:ffff:0 and a list of GDR Candidates, sorted by IP
addresses from high to low: fe80::3, fe80::2, and fe80::1.
The ordinal number assigned to those addresses would be:
0 for fe80::3; 1 for fe80::2; 2 for fe80::1 (Router X).
Assume there are 2 RPs: RP1 2001:db8::1:0:5678:1 for Group1 and
RP2 2001:db8::1:0:1234:2 for Group2.
Following the modulo hash algorithm:
LSZC(::ffff:ffff:ffff:0) is 16, and GDRC is 3.
The hashvalue_RP for Group1 with RP RP1 is:
This is different from the ordinal number of Router X (2).
Hence, Router X will not be GDR for Group2.
Limitations
The modulo hash algorithm has poor failover characteristics when
a shared LAN has more than two GDRs. In the
case of more than two GDRs on a LAN, when one GDR fails, all
of the groups may be reassigned to a different GDR, even if
they were not assigned to the failed GDR. However, many
deployments use only two routers on a shared LAN for redundancy
purposes. Future work may define new hash algorithms where only
groups assigned to the failed GDR get reassigned.
The modulo hash algorithm will use, at most, 32 consecutive bits of
the input addresses for its computation. Exactly which bits are
used of the source, group, or RP addresses depend on the respective
masks. This limitation may be an issue for IPv6 deployments,
since not all bits of the IPv6 addresses are considered. If this
causes operational issues, a new hash algorithm would need to be
defined.
PIM Hello OptionsPIM routers include a new option, called
"Load-Balancing Capability (DRLB-Cap)", in their PIM Hello messages.
Besides this DRLB-Cap Hello Option, the elected PIM DR also
includes a new "DR Load-Balancing List (DRLB-List) Hello Option".
The DRLB-List Hello Option consists of three hash masks, as defined
above, and also a list of GDR Candidate addresses on the LAN. It is
recommended that the GDR Candidate addresses are sorted in descending
order. This ensures that when using algorithms, such as the modulo hash
algorithm in this document, that it is predictable which GDR is
responsible for which groups, regardless of the order the DR learned
about the candidates.
PIM DR Load-Balancing Capability (DRLB-Cap) Hello Option
Type:
34
Length:
4
Reserved:
Transmitted as zero, ignored on receipt.
Hash Algorithm:
Hash algorithm type. A value listed in the
IANA "PIM Designated Router Load-Balancing Hash Algorithms"
registry. 0 is used for the hash algorithm defined in this
document.
This DRLB-Cap Hello Option MUST be advertised by routers on
all interfaces where DR Load Balancing is enabled. Note that the
option is included, at most, once.
PIM DR Load-Balancing List (DRLB-List) Hello Option
Type:
35
Length:
(3 + n) x (4 or 16) bytes, where n is the number
of GDR Candidates.
Group Mask (32/128 bits):
Mask applied to group addresses
as part of hash computation.
Source Mask (32/128 bits):
Mask applied to source addresses
as part of hash computation.
RP Mask (32/128 bits):
Mask applied to RP addresses
as part of hash computation.
All masks MUST have the same number of bits as the IP
source address in the PIM Hello IP header.
GDR Candidate Address(es) (32/128 bits):
List of GDR Candidate(s)All addresses MUST be in the same address family as the
PIM Hello IP header. It is recommended that the addresses are
sorted in descending order.
If the "Interface ID" option, as specified in
, is present in a GDR Candidate's
PIM Hello message and the "Router Identifier" portion is
non-zero:
For IPv4, the "GDR Candidate Address" will be set directly
to the "Router Identifier".
For IPv6, the "GDR Candidate Address" will be 96 bits of
zeroes, followed by the 32 bit Router Identifier.
If the "Interface ID" option is not present in a GDR
Candidate's PIM Hello message or if the "Interface ID"
option is present but the "Router Identifier" field is zero,
the "GDR Candidate Address" will be the IPv4 or IPv6 source
address of the PIM Hello message.
This DRLB-List Hello Option MUST only be advertised by the
elected PIM DR. It MUST be ignored if received from a non-DR.
The option MUST also be ignored if the hash masks are not
the correct number of bits or GDR Candidate addresses are in
the wrong address family.
PIM DR OperationThe DR election process is still the same as defined in
. The DR advertises the new DRLB-List Hello
Option, which contains mask values from user configuration (or default
values), followed by a list of GDR Candidate addresses. Note that
if a router included the "Interface ID" option in the hello message
and the Router ID is non-zero, the Router ID will be used to form the
GDR Candidate address of the router, as discussed in the previous
section. It is recommended that the list be sorted from the highest
value to the lowest value. The reason for sorting the list is to
make the behavior deterministic, regardless of the order in which the
DR learns of new candidates. Note that, as for non-DR routers, the DR
also advertises the DRLB-Cap Hello Option to indicate its ability to
support the new functionality and the type of GDR election hash
algorithm it uses.
If a PIM DR receives a neighbor DRLB-Cap Hello Option that
contains the same hash algorithm as the DR and the neighbor has the
same DR priority as the DR, PIM DR SHOULD consider the neighbor as a
GDR Candidate and insert the GDR Candidate's Address into the
list of the DRLB-List Option. However, the DR may have policies
limiting which or the number of GDR Candidates to
include. Likewise, the DR SHOULD include itself in the list of GDR
Candidates, but it is permissible not to do so, for instance, if there
is some policy restricting the candidate set.
If a PIM neighbor included in the list expires, stops announcing
the DRLB-Cap Hello Option, changes DR priority, changes hash algorithm,
or otherwise becomes ineligible as a candidate, the DR SHOULD
immediately send a triggered hello with a new list in the DRLB-List
option, excluding the neighbor.
If a new router becomes eligible as a candidate, there is no
urgency in sending out an updated list. An updated list SHOULD be
included in the next hello.
PIM GDR Candidate OperationWhen an IGMP/MLD report is received, a hash algorithm is used by
the GDR Candidates to determine which router is going to be responsible
for building forwarding trees on behalf of the host.
The router MUST include the DRLB-Cap Hello Option in all PIM Hello
messages sent on the interface. Note that the presence of the
DRLB-Cap Option in the PIM Hello does not guarantee that the router
will be considered as a GDR Candidate. Once the DR election is done,
the DRLB-List Hello Option is received from the current PIM DR
containing a list of the selected GDR Candidates.
A router only acts as a GDR Candidate if it is included in the GDR
Candidate list of the DRLB-List Hello Option. See next section for
details.
DRLB-List Hello Option Processing
This section discusses processing of the DRLB-List Hello Option,
including the case where it was received in the previous hello
but not in the current hello.
All routers MUST ignore the DRLB-List Hello Option if it is
received from a PIM router that is not the DR. The option MUST
only be processed by routers that are announcing the DRLB-Cap Option
and only if the hash algorithm announced by the DR is the same as
the local announcement.
All GDR Candidates MUST use the hash masks advertised
in the Option,
even if they differ from those the candidate was configured with.
The DR MUST also process its own DRLB-List Hello Option.
A router stores the latest option contents that were announced,
if any, and deletes the previous contents. The router MUST also
compare the new contents with any previous contents and, if there
are any changes, continue processing as below. Note that if the
option does not pass the above checks, the below processing MUST be
done as if the option was not announced.
If the contents of the DRLB-List Option, the masks, or the candidate
list differ from the previously saved copy, it is received for the
first time, or it is no longer being received or accepted, the
option MUST be processed as below.
If the local router is included in the "GDR Candidate
Address(es)" field, it will look for its own address, or if it
announces a non-zero Router ID, its own Router ID. For each of the
groups or source and group pairs, if the group is in SSM mode
with local receiver interest, the router MUST run
the hash algorithm to determine which of them is for the GDR.
If there is no change in the GDR status, then no further
action is required.
If the router becomes the new GDR, then a multicast
forwarding tree MUST be built .
If the router is no longer the GDR, then it uses an Assert as
explained in .
If one of the following occurs:
the local router is not included in the "GDR Candidate
Address(es)" field,
the DRLB-List Hello Option is no longer included in the DR's
Hello, or
the DR's Neighbor Liveness Timer expires [RFC7761],
then for each group (or each source and group pair if the group
is in SSM mode) with local receiver interest, for which the
router is the GDR, the router uses an Assert as explained in
.
PIM Assert ModificationGDR changes may occur due to configuration change,
GDR Candidates going down, and also new routers coming up and
becoming GDR Candidates. This may occur while flows are being
forwarded. If the GDR for an active flow changes, there is likely
to be some disruption, such as packet loss or duplicates.
By using asserts, packet loss is minimized while allowing a small
amount of duplicates.
When a router stops acting as the GDR for a group, or source and
group pair if SSM, it MUST set the Assert metric preference to maximum
(0x7fffffff) and the Assert metric to one less than maximum
(0xfffffffe). That is, whenever it sends or receives an Assert for the
group, it must use these values as the metric preference and metric
rather than the values provided by the unicast routing protocol.
The rest of this section is just for illustration purposes and
not part of the protocol definition.
To illustrate the behavior when there is a GDR change, consider
the following scenario where there are two flows:
G1 and G2. R1 is the GDR for G1, and R2 is the GDR for G2.
When R3 comes up, it is possible that R3 becomes GDR for both
G1 and G2; hence, R3 starts to build the forwarding tree for G1 and
G2. If R1 and R2 stop forwarding before R3 completes the process,
packet loss might occur. On the other hand, if R1 and R2 continue
forwarding while R3 is building the forwarding trees, duplicates
might occur.
When the role of GDR changes as above, instead of immediately
stopping forwarding, R1 and R2 continue forwarding to G1 and G2
respectively, while, at the same time, R3 build forwarding trees for
G1 and G2. This will lead to PIM Asserts.
For G1, using the functionality described in this document, R1
and R3 determine the new GDR, which is R3. With the modified Assert
behavior, R1 sets its Assert metric to the near maximum value, as discussed
above. That will make R3, which has normal metric in its Assert,
the Assert winner.
Backward CompatibilityIn the case of a hybrid Ethernet shared LAN (where some PIM routers
support the functionality defined in this document and some do not):
If the DR does not support the new functionality, then there
will be no load balancing.
If non-DR routers do not support the new functionality, they
will not be considered as GDR Candidate and will not take part
in load balancing. Load balancing may still happen on the link.
Operational Considerations
An administrator needs to consider what the total bandwidth
requirements are and find a set of routers that together have
enough available capacity while making sure that each of the routers
can handle its part, assuming that the traffic is distributed
roughly equally among the routers. Ideally, one should also have
enough bandwidth to handle the case where at least one router fails.
All routers should have reachability to the sources and
RPs, if applicable, that are not via the LAN.
Care must be taken when choosing what hash masks to configure. One
would typically configure the same masks on all the routers so that
they are the same, regardless of which router is elected as DR. The
default masks are likely suitable for most deployment. The RP Hash
Mask must be configured (the default is no bits set) if one wishes to
hash based on the RP address rather than the group address for ASM.
The default masks will use the entire group addresses, and source
addresses if SSM, as part of the hash. An administrator may set other
masks that mask out part of the addresses to ensure that certain
flows always get hashed to the same router. How this is achieved depends
on how the group addresses are allocated.
Only the routers announcing the same hash algorithm as the DR
would be considered as GDR Candidates. Network administrators
need to make sure that the desired set of routers announce the
same algorithm. Migration between different algorithms is
not considered in this document.
IANA ConsiderationsIANA has made these assignments in the "PIM-Hello Options" registry:
value 34 for the PIM DR Load-Balancing Capability (DRLB-Cap) Hello
Option (with Length of 4), and value 35 for the PIM DR Load-Balancing
List (DRLB-List) Hello Option (with variable Length).
Per this document, IANA has created a registry called
"PIM Designated Router Load-Balancing Hash Algorithms" in the
"Protocol Independent Multicast (PIM)" branch of the registry tree.
The registry lists hash algorithms for use by PIM Designated Router
Load Balancing.
Initial Registry
The initial content of the registry is as follows.
Type
Name
Reference
0
Modulo
RFC 8775
1-255
Unassigned
Assignment of New Hash AlgorithmsAssignment of new hash algorithms is done according to the "IETF
Review" procedure; see .
Security ConsiderationsSecurity of the new DR Load-Balancing PIM Hello Options is only
guaranteed by the security of PIM Hello messages, so the security
considerations for PIM Hello messages, as described in PIM-SM
, apply here.
If the DR is subverted, it could omit or add certain GDRs or
announce an unsupported algorithm. If another router is subverted, it
could be made DR and cause similar issues. While these issues are
specific to this specification, they are not that different from existing
attacks, such as subverting a DR and lowering the DR priority, causing a
different router to become the DR.
If, for any reason, the DR includes a GDR in the announced list that
announces a different algorithm from what the DR announces, the GDR
is required to ignore the announcement, and there will be no router
acting as the DR for the flows that hash to that GDR.
If a GDR is subverted, it could potentially be made to stop forwarding
all the traffic it is expected to forward. This is also similar today to
if a DR is subverted.
An administrator may be able to achieve the desired load balancing
of known flows, but an attacker may send a single high rate flow that
is served by a single GDR or send multiple flows that are expected to
be hashed to the same GDR.ReferencesNormative ReferencesKey words for use in RFCs to Indicate Requirement LevelsIn many standards track documents several words are used to signify the requirements in the specification. These words are often capitalized. This document defines these words as they should be interpreted in IETF documents. This document specifies an Internet Best Current Practices for the Internet Community, and requests discussion and suggestions for improvements.An Interface Identifier (ID) Hello Option for PIMThis document defines a new PIM Hello option to advertise an Interface Identifier that can be used by PIM protocols to uniquely identify an interface of a neighboring router. [STANDARDS-TRACK]Protocol Independent Multicast - Sparse Mode (PIM-SM): Protocol Specification (Revised)This document specifies Protocol Independent Multicast - Sparse Mode (PIM-SM). PIM-SM is a multicast routing protocol that can use the underlying unicast routing information base or a separate multicast-capable routing information base. It builds unidirectional shared trees rooted at a Rendezvous Point (RP) per group, and it optionally creates shortest-path trees per source.This document obsoletes RFC 4601 by replacing it, addresses the errata filed against it, removes the optional (*,*,RP), PIM Multicast Border Router features and authentication using IPsec that lack sufficient deployment experience (see Appendix A), and moves the PIM specification to Internet Standard.Guidelines for Writing an IANA Considerations Section in RFCsMany protocols make use of points of extensibility that use constants to identify various protocol parameters. To ensure that the values in these fields do not have conflicting uses and to promote interoperability, their allocations are often coordinated by a central record keeper. For IETF protocols, that role is filled by the Internet Assigned Numbers Authority (IANA).To make assignments in a given registry prudently, guidance describing the conditions under which new values should be assigned, as well as when and how modifications to existing values can be made, is needed. This document defines a framework for the documentation of these guidelines by specification authors, in order to assure that the provided guidance for the IANA Considerations is clear and addresses the various issues that are likely in the operation of a registry.This is the third edition of this document; it obsoletes RFC 5226.Ambiguity of Uppercase vs Lowercase in RFC 2119 Key WordsRFC 2119 specifies common key words that may be used in protocol specifications. This document aims to reduce the ambiguity by clarifying that only UPPERCASE usage of the key words have the defined special meanings.Informative ReferencesInternet Group Management Protocol, Version 3Multicast Listener Discovery Version 2 (MLDv2) for IPv6This document updates RFC 2710, and it specifies Version 2 of the ulticast Listener Discovery Protocol (MLDv2). MLD is used by an IPv6 router to discover the presence of multicast listeners on directly attached links, and to discover which multicast addresses are of interest to those neighboring nodes. MLDv2 is designed to be interoperable with MLDv1. MLDv2 adds the ability for a node to report interest in listening to packets with a particular multicast address only from specific source addresses or from all sources except for specific source addresses. [STANDARDS-TRACK]Considerations for Internet Group Management Protocol (IGMP) and Multicast Listener Discovery (MLD) Snooping SwitchesThis memo describes the recommendations for Internet Group Management Protocol (IGMP) and Multicast Listener Discovery (MLD) snooping switches. These are based on best current practices for IGMPv2, with further considerations for IGMPv3- and MLDv2-snooping. Additional areas of relevance, such as link layer topology changes and Ethernet-specific encapsulation issues, are also considered. This memo provides information for the Internet community.Source-Specific Multicast for IPIP version 4 (IPv4) addresses in the 232/8 (232.0.0.0 to 232.255.255.255) range are designated as source-specific multicast (SSM) destination addresses and are reserved for use by source-specific applications and protocols. For IP version 6 (IPv6), the address prefix FF3x::/32 is reserved for source-specific multicast use. This document defines an extension to the Internet network service that applies to datagrams sent to SSM addresses and defines the host and router requirements to support this extension. [STANDARDS-TRACK]Acknowledgements
The authors would like to thank and
for
helping with the original idea; ,
, ,
, , , ,
, , , ,
, , ,
, , and
for reviews and comments; and
and for helpful conversation on
the document.
Authors' AddressesAlibaba Group520 Almanor AvenueSunnyvaleCA94085United States of Americayiqun.cai@alibaba-inc.comAlibaba Group520 Almanor AvenueSunnyvaleCA94085United States of Americaheidi.ou@alibaba-inc.comvallepal@yahoo.comCisco Systems, Inc.821 Alder Drive,MilpitasCA95035United States of Americamankamis@cisco.comCisco Systems, Inc.Tasman DriveSan JoseCA95134United States of Americastig@cisco.comBritish TelecomAdastral ParkIpswichIP5 2REUnited Kingdomandy.da.green@bt.com